ISSN: 2475-5648 ; 2475-563XThe Great Inflation of the 1970s can be understood as the result of equilibrium indeterminacy in which loose monetary policy engendered excess volatility in macroeconomic aggregates and prices. The Federal Reserve inadvertently pursued policies that were not anti-inflationary enough because it did not fully understand the economic environment it was operating in. Specifically, it had imperfect knowledge about the structure of the economy and was subject to data misperceptions. The combination of learning about the economy and the use of mis-measured data resulted in policies, which the Federal Reserve believed to be optimal, but when implemented led to equilibrium indeterminacy.Thomas A. Lubik, Christian Matthe
We study whether monetary economies display nominal indeterminacy: equivalently, whether mon-etary p...
This paper argues that the Federal Reserve’s failure to control inflation during the 1970s was due t...
We work with a newly developed method to empirically assess whether a specified new-Keynesian busine...
We argue in this paper that the Great Ination of the 1970s can be understood as the result of equili...
January 2016This paper estimates a New Keynesian model of the U.S. economy over the period following...
Available online 30 July 2016Abstract not availableThomas A. Lubik, Christian Matthe
An influential paper by Clarida, Gaĺı and Gertler (2000) has attributed the great inflation of the ...
There have been numerous attempts to explain and understand the period of rapid infl ation in the Un...
I study whether money growth targeting leads to indeterminacy in the price level. I extend a convent...
This paper investigates the role that imperfect knowledge about the structure of the economy plays i...
The paper re-examines whether the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy was a source of instability duri...
We study the hypothesis that misperceptions of trend productivity growth during the onset of the pro...
This paper employs a standard new Keynesian model to compute the inflation/output volatility frontie...
We document that monetary policy inertia can help alleviate problems of indeterminacy and non-existe...
M onetary economists have been rather proud about developmentsin their subject over the past two dec...
We study whether monetary economies display nominal indeterminacy: equivalently, whether mon-etary p...
This paper argues that the Federal Reserve’s failure to control inflation during the 1970s was due t...
We work with a newly developed method to empirically assess whether a specified new-Keynesian busine...
We argue in this paper that the Great Ination of the 1970s can be understood as the result of equili...
January 2016This paper estimates a New Keynesian model of the U.S. economy over the period following...
Available online 30 July 2016Abstract not availableThomas A. Lubik, Christian Matthe
An influential paper by Clarida, Gaĺı and Gertler (2000) has attributed the great inflation of the ...
There have been numerous attempts to explain and understand the period of rapid infl ation in the Un...
I study whether money growth targeting leads to indeterminacy in the price level. I extend a convent...
This paper investigates the role that imperfect knowledge about the structure of the economy plays i...
The paper re-examines whether the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy was a source of instability duri...
We study the hypothesis that misperceptions of trend productivity growth during the onset of the pro...
This paper employs a standard new Keynesian model to compute the inflation/output volatility frontie...
We document that monetary policy inertia can help alleviate problems of indeterminacy and non-existe...
M onetary economists have been rather proud about developmentsin their subject over the past two dec...
We study whether monetary economies display nominal indeterminacy: equivalently, whether mon-etary p...
This paper argues that the Federal Reserve’s failure to control inflation during the 1970s was due t...
We work with a newly developed method to empirically assess whether a specified new-Keynesian busine...